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Thread: PC/ Mac e-mail attachments

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Dec 2003
    Location
    Hudson Valley, Upstate NY
    Posts
    240

    PC/ Mac e-mail attachments

    Anyone,, what do you save a file as if you are on a PC and sending it to a Mac? Long story short: a client of mine just "upgraded" her Mac to OS 10. I own a PC, and have been e-mailing her my invoices saved as a ".rtf" file. Now that she has upgraded, she can no longer open my invoices. I thought the way to solve this problem was to send your file as a .html, but that option doesn't appear in my "save as..." box. Any suggestions?
    I (obviously) am no computer whiz, but I do find that invoices are much more effective when they get to the client. ;-) Thanks in advance, Walt.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Feb 2003
    Location
    Conway, Arkansas
    Posts
    13,186
    Walt,

    A safe choice here is to save it in PDF format. This way, even someone on a raw Unix box can open it if they have the reader.
    Thanks & Happy Wood Chips,
    Dennis -
    Get the Benefits of Being an SMC Contributor..!
    ....DEBT is nothing more than yesterday's spending taken from tomorrow's income.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Jan 2004
    Location
    San Jose, Middle California
    Posts
    636
    I am with Dennis on this. Everything I email is in .PDF format for security reasons. .PDF's can be read by Windows, Mac, Linux & Unix.

    I have Acrobat 6.0 but it expensive, and extremely capable, at $449.00 MSRP.

    There are .PDF creators that act like plugins to Word such as the following. I have no experience with this program http://www.fineprint.com/ but it appears to have a demo download available.
    Michael in San Jose
    Non confundar in aeternam

  4. #4

    mac/pc attachments

    Walt, I'm on a Mac and get attachments all the time from my students on PC machines. Using Mac OS 10.3, I have no trouble reading .rtf files. She might try first opening MS Office and then telling Office to open the file. Or, just try sending the file as an MS Word doc rather than .rtf. The idea about pdf files is the best but this idea will cost nothing and is probably worth a shot. good luck.

    Diane

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Mar 2004
    Location
    Vermont
    Posts
    2,296
    If you really want to impress your mac friend...have her drag the .rtf file onto her safari icon in the dock. The file will open in her browser. If she needs to edit it, then you can have her right click(or control click) on the file and navigate to the "open with" arroe and choose the "text edit" application. But if she only needs to read or print the file then the safari app is the quickest since that program will be most likely open all the time.

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